ON BECOMING A POET
Submitted by Thomas Penn Johnson
THE DUDLEY THESPIANS
Submitted by Thomas Penn Johnson
From September 1958 to May 1961, I attended James B. Dudley High School, and I was a member of The Dudley Thespians. The Thespians were those students who were enrolled in a dramatics class that met every day during the last period of the day; they studied plays and produced two plays a year–a full-length production in the Fall semester and in the Spring semester a one-act play at a regional festival of plays performed in the Dudley Auditorium. There were matinee performances attended by students from local junior high schools and evening performances attended by Dudley students and the general public. The 1000-seat Dudley auditorium was always packed for every play performed by The Dudley Thespians.
The Dudley Thespians were instructed by, and under the direction of, English teacher Mrs. Barbara Wells. She had a comprehensive knowledge of theatrical arts, and she was a consummate master of dramaturgy. In directing her players, she demanded nothing less than perfection in their mastery of stagecraft. Watching her physical presence in rehearsals was like watching the physical manifestation of the essence of every character who spoke and moved on the stage.
Before arriving at Dudley High School, I was inspired to join The Dudley Thespians by my attendance at the matinee performances. I saw the spectacular and unforgettable performances of the full-length play Bell, Book, and Candle and the one-act play The Lamb in the Window (in which my brother Jesse was privileged to perform). The plays themselves were powerful, and the phenomenal acting of the players like Franklin Cheek, Harold Hairston, and especially Shirley Hinnant seemed to me stunning and magical.
To get accepted into The Dudley Thespians a new student had to audition in class before Mrs. Wells and the returning students during the first week of the Fall semester. A new student had to select a poem or speech and then perform alone on stage an interpretive reading of the selected piece. Anxious because another student had already chosen “Invictus,” the standard first choice of many, I spent hours in the school library frantically searching for a poem to recite. When I discovered in the library the volume entitled The Collected Poems A. E. Housman, I was profoundly moved by the poems, and I resolved to choose a poem written by Housman. Ironically, this sophomore already committed to study for the ministry was inexplicably drawn to the poem “The Laws of God, the Laws of Man.” As I became in later years, I think Mrs. Wells was astonished by this unique selection.
During three years under the direction of Mrs. Wells, I was privileged to perform in the following plays: The Willow and I, Still Stands the House, Night of January 16th, High Window, Arsenic and Old Lace, and Everlasting Flowers (with which in 1961 The Dudley Thespians won best play and I won best actor at the State drama festival held at Shaw University).
Under the tutelage of Mrs. Wells, I was privileged to enjoy the instruction of guest directors/judges poet Owen Dodson of Howard University and Dr. Eady of Bennett College.
In college I enjoyed the direction of outstanding dramatics teachers Dr. Paul Harms of Concordia Senior College and Miss Anna Krause of Northwestern University—truly great teachers (I had the lead roles in A Man for All Seasons & Murder in the Cathedral, and I played the role of Mephistopheles in Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus). But the most significant teacher in my learning of dramatics was Barbara Wells, who in person and work represented superior excellence that defined The Dudley Thespians, to which I owe everlasting gratitude for making me the poet and artist that I have become.